The Secular Prophet of Religious Socialism the Erich Fromm’S Early Writings (1922-1930)

The Secular Prophet of Religious Socialism the Erich Fromm’S Early Writings (1922-1930)

The secular prophet of religious socialism The Erich Fromm’s early writings (1922-1930) Michael Löwy* https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5679-0927 Dialectics of the secular and the sacred There exists a German-Jewish cultural discourse from the early 20th century that stands in dynamic tension between spiritual and material, sacred and secular, beyond the usual static dichotomies. Several key Jewish thinkers have sought to recover spiritual meaning, in direct interaction with the profane. Under different ways they developed a process of simultaneous secularization and sacralization, in a sort of “dialectic” combination of both. Among some examples: Franz Kafka, Walter Benjamin, Ernst Bloch, Erich Fromm, Gustav Landauer, Martin Buber, Gershom Scholem, Leo Löwenthal, Hans Kohn, Manes Sperber and others. This applies particularly to their early writings (until 1933) although in some cases it holds true during their entire life. The first common characteristic of these authors is their deep attachment to the German romantic culture, with its ambivalence towards modernity, and its desperate attempt at re-enchanting the world through a return to past spiritual forms. For the Jewish thinkers, this meant a rediscovery of the spiritual treasures of the less rational and less codified forms of Jewish religiosity, the “romantic” religious traditions of the past: the Prophets, Messianism, Mysticism, Kabballah, Sabbataism, Hassidism. * Centre National de Recherche Scientifique, Paris, França. The secular prophet of religious socialism, pp. 21-31 However, being modern subjects, they cannot return to the faith of their ancestors: their spirituality is intimately intertwined with secular aspirations. These aspirations lead them – and this is another common aspect of their writings – to support radical social/political utopias, such as socialism, communism or anarchism, which are in a relation of elective affinity with the Jewish Messianic heritage. In his already canonical essay A Secular Age, Charles Taylor has an interesting insight: the Romantic protests against disenchantment can take both religious and secular forms. However, “in the face of the opposition between orthodoxy and unbelief, many, and among them the best and the most sensitive minds, were […] looking for a third way” (Taylor, 2007, p. 302). Most of the Romantic Jewish-German authors above mentioned seem to be among these “best and most sensitive minds” searching for a third way. A tentative typology of the various forms of this dialectic between secularisation and sacralisation would distinguish the following: 1. Orthodox religious socialism: Erich Fromm’s doctoral thesis (1922) 2. Heterodox religious socialism: Martin Buber, Gershom Scholem, Hans Kohn and the young Leo Löwenthal. The rejection of assimilation, and the assertion of a strong but heterodox religious Jewish identity, is the dominant aspect of their thought. And all share, on various degrees, a universal utopian perspec- tive, a sort of libertarian (Anarchist) socialism, which they articulate with their Messianic religious faith. 3. Revolutionary (Jewish) messianism: Walter Benjamin. The religious/profane connection takes here the form of what Benjamin once called, in a letter to Scholem, from May 1926, the “paradoxical mutual reversal (Umschlagen) of the religious into the political”. Concerning his last writing, the Thesis On the concept of history (1940), one could say that revolution and messianism enter in a relation of correspondence (in the sense Baudelaire uses the term). 4. Secular religion of liberty: Franz Kafka. In a letter to Grete Bloch from June 1914 Kafka insisted that he was a “non believing” Jew. However, there appears in his writings something which could be described as a secular/sacred “Religion of Liberty”, where absolut individual freedom becomes a messianic principle. 5. Religious atheism, Secular Jews, with religious interests and Anarchist or Marx- ist sympathies: Gustav Landauer, Ernst Bloch, the young Georg Lukács, Manès Sperber. Religious atheism is a paradoxical figure of the spirit that seems to deny traditional religious beliefs (“God”) in order best to appropriate, with a deep emotional intensity, religious ideas and symbols. 22 Tempo Social, revista de sociologia da USP, v. 32, n. 2 Michael Löwy The case of Erich Fromm Let us briefly discuss the case of Erich Fromm (1900-1980) whose early writings present a unique combination of orthodox Judaism and radical socialist ideas, reli- gious beliefs and secular science: Weberian sociology first, Freudian psychoanalysis next, and finally Freudo-Marxist historiography. Fromm is well known for his essays in social psychology, most of them written after his exile in the United States at the end of the 1930’s. But his less known early works – from 1922 to 1930 – are very creative, as well as politically radical, and deserve to be discussed. They have some common aspects: a messianic understand- ing of Judaism; a socialist rejection of capitalism as a socio-economic system; and the revolutionary aspiration for a social utopia with religious roots. These elements together shaped an original and subversive thought. After participating, with Martin Buber and Franz Rosenzweig, at the foundation of the Free House for Jewish Studies in Frankfurt, the young Fromm – at that time still a believing Jew – presented in 1922 at the University of Heidelberg his doctoral thesis, directed by the sociologist Alfred Weber, under the title The Jewish Law: Contribution to the sociology of diaspora Judaïsm. Probably for personal reasons – his loss of faith a few years later – the book will not be published during his life time; it will appear only 70 years later, after his death, in an edition of his complete works. In spite of the title, the work has not much in common with a sociological monography on the diaspora Jewish communities (demography, institutions, fam- ily). It belongs rather to the classical school of the German sociology of culture and religion, as practiced by the Weber brothers, Alfred and Max. In other words, at the center of the research are the relations between socio-religious cultures and economic ethics. To these methodological references one has to add other ingredi- ents, less conventional and less academic: the ideas of his master in Talmud, Rabbi Salman Baruch Rabinkow, partisan of a socialist Judaïsm influenced by the Rus- sian intelligentsia, and of Martin Buber, the romantic socialist who re-discovered Hassidism. The most astonishing aspect of this doctoral thesis is its strong anti- capitalist and anti-bourgeois edge, which seems to belong to the realm of Jewish religious socialism1. 1. One can find in Lawrence J. Friedman’s intellectual biography of Erich Fromm a very lively presenta- tion of the early religious studies and activities of Fromm, as well as of his relation to Rabinkow, Buber, Rosenzweig and others. However, when discussing Fromm’s doctoral thesis he missed the strong socio- political message of the work. See Friedman (2013, pp. 3-28). May-Aug. 2020 23 The secular prophet of religious socialism, pp. 21-31 The first chapter, “The significance of Law in Judaïsm”, is an attempt at a socio- religious analysis of the Jewish religion inspired by Alfred Weber’s sociology of cul- ture2. According to Fromm, the loss of State, language and territory did not prevent diaspora Judaism from keeping its social and religious identity. By destroying Judea, the Romains only dealt with a shell (Gehäuse), without importance for the Jewish historical body. There is probably a sort of Anarchist tendency in this negative at- titude towards the State. In Fromm’s understanding, Jewish religion, which assured the continuity of the Jewish people in the diaspora, was not a theological system, a body of dogmas, but a collection of laws and rules, the Halacha, which did not manifest itself so much in the Kindgon of Ideas, but rather in “value-rational actions (wertrationalen Handeln) of Max Weber” (Fromm, 1989, pp. 16-21). This first chap- ter includes an interesting section called “Labor and Vocation (Beruf) in Rabbinical Judaism”; directly inspired by Max Weber, Fromm tries to demonstrate that, unlike Protestant ethics, the Jewish ones are not favorable to the spirit of capitalism. Jewish economic ethics are, in Weber’s terminology, “traditionalist”: knowledge, not labor, is the supreme value; not by accident, in the Biblical narrative of the expulsion from Paradise, work is presented as a malediction. Alternating Biblical, Talmudic and… Weberian quotations, Fromm argues that “in direct contradiction to the Puritan conceptions”, Jewish ethics do not at all consider the acquisition of wealth as a duty towards God; they represent, therefore “a non-capitalist attitude towards the economy”. For sure, one can find, in modern times, Jewish capitalists, but, as Weber has shown, this is a “pariah capitalism”, speculative, political and adventurous, in contrast to the Puritan ethos of the rational bourgeois enterprise, with its rational organization of labor (Fromm, 1989, pp. 41-54). Fromm rejects – again, referring himself to Max Weber – Werner Sombart’s attempt to present the Jews as the first modern capitalists, and his definition of Judaism as a purely rationalist religion: the ethical line which goes from the biblical Prophets until Hassidism, passing by the Mishna and the Kabbala, is anything but rationalist. The 19th century German rabbis quoted by Sombart in support of his thesis do not represent the authentic Jewish religion – which remained

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    11 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us